U.S. company granted salvage rights to ship believed to contain millions in B.C. gold
A Seattle-based company has been granted salvage rights to a ship containing piles of gold that sank near the B.C. coast in the 19th century.
The SS Pacific collided with another vessel shortly after it departed for a trip from Victoria to San Francisco in November of 1875 and was never seen again. Roughly 275 people, many of them gold miners, are believed to have died in the wreck.
Several unsuccessful attempts to locate and recover the boat have been made over the years, but Jeff Hummel, the president of Rockfish Incorporated, believes his team has done it.
"This is a childhood dream realized in adulthood, finding this particular vessel,” Hummel told CTV News.
Hummel says he began his pursuit of the boat in the '90s. In 2017, he formed a team in Seattle to track it down.
He says they embarked on 12 expeditions using a sonar and a towed camera sled.
Rockfish based its search off old records that showed the vessel went down southwest of Cape Flattery, as well as information from fishermen who found coal in their nets.
Hummel said the team obtained a piece of the coal and had it tested in a lab in Alberta. The results ended up matching the chemical analysis of coal from a mine owned by the owners of the SS Pacific.
“From that we were able to determine, it was from the wreck,” Hummel said.
Hummel says it was ultimately the sonar imaging equipment that zeroed in on the boat.
"We saw something that looked like the paddle wheels, and so once we identified those and we took some measurements on some of the other equipment I said, 'OK, this absolutely is the Pacific,” Hummel said.
Inside the boat is believed to be at least $5 million worth of gold, as well as many other valuable artifacts.
Last month, Rockfish was granted salvage rights to the ship in the United States District Court in Seattle.
However, anyone who can prove a family connection to an owner of the gold or any other item can come forward to attempt to claim it.
“It’s kind of like a process of probate,” said Hummel.
He says the team also wants to recover things like the steam machinery and paddles, which they believe are still intact.
"The state of preservation, I think, is going to be just really renowned with regards to this wreck,” he said.
Hummel, who’s also the director the not-for-profit Northwest Shipwreck Alliance, says he’d like to build a museum and hotel.
"We're just looking forward to telling about the ship and particularly about the lives of the people that were on board,” he said. “It was very important to Puget Sound, Canada and Victoria.”
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
WHO decision on COVID-19 emergency won't affect Canada's response: Tam
The World Health Organization will announce Monday whether it thinks COVID-19 still represents a global health emergency but Canada's top doctor says regardless of what the international body decides, Canada's response to the coronavirus will not change.

Video shows struggle for hammer during Pelosi attack
Video released publicly Friday shows the husband of former U.S. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi struggling with his assailant for control of a hammer moments before he was struck in the head during a brutal attack in the couple's San Francisco home last year.
Remembering the horrors of the Holocaust 78 years after liberation of Auschwitz-Birkenau
In an emotional and powerful speech at an International Holocaust Remembrance Day event in Ottawa, a survivor stressed the importance of remembering the millions of victims murdered by the Nazis during the Second World War and underscored the need to stand up against anti-semitism and hate.
Running Room Canada website hit with data breach; some passwords, credit card info accessed
An outside group may have accessed the online personal information of some Running Room customers in Canada over the last several months, the retailer says.
What is going on with Bill C-11, the government's online streaming legislation?
The Liberals have spent years trying to pass online streaming legislation and now the current iteration, known as Bill C-11, is closer than ever to passing. With a potential parliamentary showdown ahead, here's what you need to know about how the contentious Broadcasting Act bill got to this stage.
Zellers rolling out food trucks for Canadians 'craving a taste of nostalgia'
Though you won't be able to sit on the old, cracked pleather benches and take in the thick smell of gravy and fries, while the gentle sound of clanging dishes provides the soundtrack for your lunch, Zellers plans to roll out food trucks for those 'craving a taste of nostalgia.'
MPs prepare for return to Parliament as Ottawa marks one-year anniversary of 'Freedom Convoy'
Members of Parliament are making their way back to Ottawa ahead of resuming sitting on Monday, as the city prepares to mark the one-year anniversary of the arrival of 'Freedom Convoy' protesters.
Pamela Anderson defends Tim Allen after flashing allegation
Pamela Anderson is addressing discussion about a story regarding her 'Home Improvement' co-star Tim Allen that is part of her new memoir, 'Love Pamela.'
'We must meet this moment': Trudeau says in speech to Liberal caucus
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau called on his Liberal caucus to meet the moment on Friday, as Canadians deal with the high cost of living, a struggling health-care system and the effects of climate change.